The present invention provides mutant rmla enzymes possessing an increased purine/pyrimidine bias in nucleotide triphosphate substrate specificity as compared to a corresponding non-mutated rmla enzyme. Such enzymes expand the types of substrates that can be used in enzymatic glycorandomization methods thereby increasing diversity of chemical libraries.
|
1. An isolated mutant glucose-1-phosphate thymidylyltransferase (rmla) nucleotidyltransferase consisting of the amino acid sequence of SEQ ID NO:1 except having a glutamic acid, alanine, serine, aspartic acid, or asparagine at position 83 of SEQ ID NO:1, wherein said isolated mutant rmla nucleotidyltransferase exhibits an increased purine/pyrimidine bias in nucleoside triphosphate substrate specificity as compared to a corresponding non-mutated rmla nucleotidyltransferase.
2. A method of providing a mutant rmla nucleotidyltransferase with increased purine/pyrimidine bias in nucleoside triphosphate substrate specificity, comprising:
(a) mutating an isolated nucleic acid sequence encoding an rmla nucleotidyltransferase having the amino acid sequence set forth in SEQ ID NO:1 to replace glutamine at position 83 with glutamic acid, alanine, serine, aspartic acid, or asparagine;
(b) expressing said isolated nucleic acid in a host cell; and
(c) isolating from said host cell a mutant rmla nucleotidyltransferase that exhibits an increased purine/pyrimidine bias in nucleoside triphosphate substrate specificity as compared to a corresponding non-mutated rmla nucleotidyltransferase.
3. A method of providing a nucleotide-diphospho-sugar, comprising incubating a nucleoside triphosphate and a sugar-1-phosphate in the presence of an isolated mutant rmla nucleotidyltransferase as set forth in
4. The method according to
5. The method according to
6. The method according to
7. The method according to
8. The method according to
9. The method according to
10. The method according to
|
This application claims priority to U.S. Provisional Application No. 60/912,009, filed Apr. 16, 2007, which is incorporated herein by reference in its entirety.
This invention was made with United States government support awarded by the following agencies: NIH AI052218. The United States government has certain rights in this invention.
This invention relates generally to the fields of enzymatic glycorandomization and the production of diverse chemical libraries. More particularly, the present invention is directed to nucleotidyltransferases possessing enhanced nucleotide triphosphate flexibility. Such enzymes broaden the number of sugar substrate families available for use in enzymatic glycorandomization.
Carbohydrates are vital in nature, not only for energy metabolism, but also as structural scaffolds, recognition motifs, solubility aids, and functional modulators. Yet despite the vast structural and functional diversity of natural glycoconjugates, they are constructed via common biosynthetic themes. Specifically, sugars are attached to most proteins, lipids, carbohydrates, and small molecules by glycosyltransferases which, with few exceptions, use sugar nucleotides as the monosaccharide donors. These sugar nucleotides are constructed from sugar-1-phosphates and NTPs by sugar-1-phosphate nucleotidyltransferases, also referred to as sugar nucleotide pyrophosphorylases (E.C. 2.7.7.-), providing the precursors (usually ADP-, CDP-, GDP-, UDP- and dTDP-glucoses, as well as GDP-mannose, GDP-fucose, and UDP-N-acetylglucosamine) central to nearly all glycosylation-dependent processes.
Nucleotidyltransferases are prevalent in nature [there are currently ˜14,000 known and putative nucleotidyltransferase sequences in GenBank], are often allosterically controlled, and generally proceed via ordered bi-bi mechanisms. For example, the forward reaction catalyzed by Salmonella glucose-1-phosphate thymidylyltransferase (RmlA), set forth herein as SEQ ID NO:1 (deposited as GenBank Accession No. CAA40117), proceeds via direct SN2 attack upon the NTP α-phosphate by an α-
The corresponding pyrimidine-based sugar nucleotide libraries have served as the foundation for a process known as natural product glycorandomization (FIG. 1B)—an enzymatic strategy to exchange natural product sugars with diverse sugar arrays. To date this strategy has been applied toward the diversification of glycopeptide, coumarin and macrolide antibiotics, as well as anthelmintic avermectin and enediyne anticancer agents. Yet while there exist limited reports wherein sugar-1-phosphate guanylyl- or adenylyl-transferases displayed moderate sugar-1-phosphate flexibility, the lack of a general strategy to generate diverse purine-based sugar nucleotide libraries excludes the corresponding diversification of many natural products glycosylated by purine sugar nucleotide-dependent glycosyltransferases.
Recently, thermophilic uridylyl- and thymidylyl-transferases were revealed to utilize alternative nucleotides, including both ribo- and deoxyribo-variants of one or more purine nucleotides. However, no single enzyme has been reported to utilize all eight naturally occurring NTPs. As can be appreciated, a single “universal” nucleotidyltransferase is highly desirable and would greatly benefit the production of diverse chemical libraries enzymatic and, in particular, enzymatic glycorandomization methodology.
The present inventor's determination of RmlA nucleoside triphosphate specificity revealed this catalyst to utilize all eight naturally occurring NTPs, with varying levels of catalytic efficiency, even in the presence of non-native sugar-1-phosphates. The uniquely broad synthetic utility of RmlA was then enhanced by structure-based engineering to yield several mutant RmlA enzymes possessing an increased purine/pyrimidine bias in nucleoside triphosphate substrate specificity as compared to a corresponding non-mutated RmlA enzyme.
Accordingly, the invention provides in a first aspect an isolated RmlA nucleotidyltransferase comprising the amino acid sequence set forth in SEQ ID NO:1 having a mutation at position 83 from glutamine to glutamic acid, alanine, serine, aspartic acid, or asparagine. The resulting mutant RmlA nucleotidyltransferase exhibits an increased purine/pyrimidine bias in nucleoside triphosphate substrate specificity as compared to a corresponding non-mutated RmlA nucleotidyltransferase.
In a second aspect, the invention encompasses a method of providing a mutant RmlA nucleotidyltransferase with increased purine/pyrimidine bias in nucleoside triphosphate substrate specificity. Such method includes steps of: (a) mutating an isolated nucleic acid sequence encoding an RmlA nucleotidyltransferase having the amino acid sequence set forth in SEQ ID NO:1 to replace glutamine at position 83 with glutamic acid, alanine, serine, aspartic acid, or asparagine; (b) expressing the isolated nucleic acid in a host cell; and (c) isolating from the host cell a mutant RmlA nucleotidyltransferase that exhibits an increased purine/pyrimidine bias in nucleoside triphosphate substrate specificity as compared to a corresponding non-mutated RmlA nucleotidyltransferase.
In yet another aspect, the invention provides a method of providing a nucleotide-diphospho-sugar. Such a method includes steps of incubating a nucleoside triphosphate and a sugar-1-phosphate in the presence of an isolated mutant RmlA nucleotidyltransferase as described and claimed herein to enzymatically provide a nucleotide-diphospho-sugar.
Other objects, features and advantages of the present invention will become apparent after review of the specification, claims and drawings.
Before the present materials and methods are described, it is understood that this invention is not limited to the particular methodology, protocols, materials, and reagents described, as these may vary. The terminology used herein is for the purpose of describing particular embodiments only, and is not intended to limit the scope of the present invention which will be limited only by the appended claims.
As used herein and in the appended claims, the singular forms “a”, “an”, and “the” include plural reference unless the context clearly dictates otherwise. As well, the terms “a” (or “an”), “one or more” and “at least one” can be used interchangeably herein, and the terms “comprising”, “including”, and “having” can be used interchangeably.
Unless defined otherwise, all technical and scientific terms used herein have the same meanings as commonly understood by one of ordinary skill in the art to which this invention belongs. Although any methods and materials similar or equivalent to those described herein can be used in the practice or testing of the present invention, the preferred methods and materials are now described. All publications and patents specifically mentioned herein are incorporated by reference for all purposes including describing and disclosing the chemicals, cell lines, vectors, animals, instruments, statistical analysis and methodologies which are reported in the publications which might be used in connection with the invention. All references cited in this specification are to be taken as indicative of the level of skill in the art. Nothing herein is to be construed as an admission that the invention is not entitled to antedate such disclosure by virtue of prior invention.
The practice of the present invention will employ, unless otherwise indicated, conventional techniques of molecular biology, microbiology, recombinant DNA, and immunology, which are within the skill of the art. Such techniques are explained fully in the literature. See, for example, Molecular Cloning A Laboratory Manual, 2nd Ed., ed. by Sambrook, Fritsch and Maniatis (Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press: 1989); DNA Cloning, Volumes I and II (D. N. Glover ed., 1985); Oligonucleotide Synthesis (M. J. Gait ed., 1984); Mullis et al. U.S. Pat. No. 4,683,195; Nucleic Acid Hybridization (B. D. Hames & S. J. Higgins eds. 1984); Transcription And Translation (B. D. Hames & S. J. Higgins eds. 1984); Culture Of Animal Cells (R. I. Freshney, Alan R. Liss, Inc., 1987); Immobilized Cells And Enzymes (IRL Press, 1986); B. Perbal, A Practical Guide To Molecular Cloning (1984); the treatise, Methods In Enzymology (Academic Press, Inc., N.Y.); Gene Transfer Vectors For Mammalian Cells (J. H. Miller and M. P. Calos eds., 1987, Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory); Methods In Enzymology, Vols. 154 and 155 (Wu et al. eds.), Immunochemical Methods In Cell And Molecular Biology (Mayer and Walker, eds., Academic Press, London, 1987); and Handbook Of Experimental Immunology, Volumes I-IV (D. M. Weir and C. C. Blackwell, eds., 1986).
The following abbreviations are used herein: NTP, nucleotide-5′-triphosphate; ATP, adenosine-5′-triphosphate; CTP, cytidine-5′-triphosphate; GTP, guanosine-5′-triphosphate; UTP, uridine-5′-triphosphate; dATP, 2′-deoxyadenosine-5′-triphosphate; dCTP, 2′-deoxycytidine-5′-triphosphate; dGTP, 2′-deoxyguanosine-5′-triphosphate; dTTP, 2′deoxythymidine-5′-triphosphate; NDP-sugar, nucleotide diphosphosugar; IPTG, isopropyl-β-D-thiogalactopyranoside; BSA, bovine serum albumin; wt, wild-type; SDS-PAGE, sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis.
Nucleotidyltransferases are central to nearly all glycosylation-dependent processes and have been used extensively for the chemoenzymatic synthesis of sugar nucleotides. In this regard, the present invention is directed to engineering single universal nucleotidyltransferases and thereby providing new catalysts for the synthesis of novel NDP-sugars.
The manipulation of RmlA described herein is exemplary of the present invention. Specifically, the inventor's in-depth characterization of the NTP specificity of wild-type RmlA revealed wt RmlA to utilize all eight naturally occurring nucleoside triphosphates as substrates, with varying levels of catalytic efficiency, even in the presence of non-native sugar-1-phosphates. Based upon a composite nucleotidyltransferase purine-binding structural model, RmlA was subsequently engineered to provide mutants which displayed altered pyrimidine/purine biases by up to 3-orders of magnitude as measured by apparent kcat/KM. This approach therefore facilitates the production of diverse purine-based sugar nucleotide libraries and will not only enhance the prospects of natural product glycorandomization, but will also facilitate the production of novel reagents for glycobiology.
Accordingly, the invention provides in a first aspect an isolated RmlA nucleotidyltransferase comprising the amino acid sequence set forth in SEQ ID NO:1 having a mutation at position 83 from glutamine to glutamic acid, alanine, serine, aspartic acid, or asparagine. The resulting mutant RmlA nucleotidyltransferase exhibits an increased purine/pyrimidine bias in nucleoside triphosphate substrate specificity as compared to a corresponding non-mutated RmlA nucleotidyltransferase.
In a second aspect, the invention encompasses a method of providing a mutant RmlA nucleotidyltransferase with increased purine/pyrimidine bias in nucleoside triphosphate substrate specificity. Such method includes steps of: (a) mutating an isolated nucleic acid sequence encoding an RmlA nucleotidyltransferase having the amino acid sequence set forth in SEQ ID NO:1 to replace glutamine at position 83 with glutamic acid, alanine, serine, aspartic acid, or asparagine; (b) expressing the isolated nucleic acid in a host cell; and (c) isolating from the host cell a mutant RmlA nucleotidyltransferase that exhibits an increased purine/pyrimidine bias in nucleoside triphosphate substrate specificity as compared to a corresponding non-mutated RmlA nucleotidyltransferase.
In yet another aspect, the invention provides a method of providing a nucleotide-diphospho-sugar. Such a method includes steps of incubating a nucleoside triphosphate and a sugar-1-phosphate in the presence of an isolated mutant RmlA nucleotidyltransferase as described and claimed herein to enzymatically provide a nucleotide-diphospho-sugar.
In certain embodiments, the nucleoside triphosphate is a purine nucleoside triphosphate. Alternatively, the nucleoside triphosphate is a pyrimidine nucleoside triphosphate.
The nucleoside triphosphate may further be a deoxyribose-containing nucleoside triphosphate or, alternatively, a ribose-containing nucleoside triphosphate.
In preferred embodiments, the sugar-1-phosphate is a hexose-1-phosphate, more preferably selected from 6-amino-6-deoxyglucose, glucosamine, mannose, galactose, glucose, N-acetyl-glucosamine, 3-O-methyl-glucose, 6-deoxyglucose, 3-azido-3-deoxyglucose, or 4-azido-4-deoxyglucose.
It is certainly envisioned that the present invention provides methods utilizing a plurality of different nucleoside triphosphates and a plurality of different sugar-1-phosphates to enzymatically synthesize a plurality of different nucleotide-diphospho-sugars.
The following examples are, of course, offered for illustrative purposes only, and are not intended to limit the scope of the present invention in any way. Indeed, various modifications of the invention in addition to those shown and described herein will become apparent to those skilled in the art from the foregoing description and the following examples and fall within the scope of the appended claims.
This example describes general materials and methods used to generate the data and results set forth in the following examples. Glucose-1-phosphate, mannose-1-phosphate, glucosamine-1-phosphate, N-acetyl-glucosamine-1-phosphate, galactose-1-phosphate, and NTPs were obtained from commercial sources (Sigma, St. Louis, Mo., USA; or Invitrogen, Carlsbad, Calif., USA) and used without further purification. The syntheses of 3-O-methyl-glucose-1-phosphate, 3-azido-3-deoxyglucose-1-phosphate, 4-azido-4-deoxyglucose-1-phosphate, 6-deoxyglucose-1-phosphate, and 6-amino-6-deoxyglucose-1-phosphate were previously described (Jiang et al. (2000) J. Am. Chem. Soc. 122, 6803-6804; Jiang et al. (2001) Angew. Chem., Int. Ed. 40, 1502-1505; Jiang et al. (2003) Chem Bio Chem 4, 443-446; and Fu et al. (2003) Nat. Biotechnol. 21, 1467-1469.) All other materials were reagent grade or better and purchased from Sigma-Aldrich (St. Louis, Mo., USA), or Fisher Scientific (Pittsburgh, Pa., USA). Analytical HPLC was performed using a Varian ProStar HPLC system (Varian Inc., Palo Alto, Calif., USA). Standard mass spectrometry utilized electrospray ionization and was performed using either an Agilent 100 HPLC-MSD mass spectrometer (Agilent Technologies, Palo Alto, Calif., USA) or a Micromass LCT mass spectrometer (Waters, Milford, Mass., USA).
Protein Expression and Purification—Salmonella enterica typhimurium LT2 wt RmlA and all engineered RmlA mutants were expressed as N-His6 fusion proteins from pET28a-based expression plasmids (Novagen, Madison, Wis., USA) in Escherichia coli BL21 (DE3) in a manner similar to previous methods (Ko et al. (2005) J. Org. Chem. 70, 1919-1921; Griffith et al. (2005) Curr. Opin. Biotechnol. 16, 622-630; Fu et al. (2003) Nat. Biotechnol. 21, 1467-1469; Albermann et al. (2003) Org. Lett. 5, 933-936; Fu et al. (2005) Org. Lett. 7, 1513-15151). Specifically, an overnight starter culture of LB media containing 50 μg/mL kanamycin was directly inoculated from a glycerol stock of the desired expression strain. After growth overnight (37° C., 250 rpm), this culture was diluted 1:100 with 2× YT media (Sambrook, J., Fritsch, E. F., and Maniatis, T. (1989) Molecular Cloning: a library manual, 2nd Ed. Ed., Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press, New York) containing 50 μg/mL kanamycin, typically to a total volume of 1 L. The large-scale culture was subsequently grown (37° C., 250 rpm) to mid-log phase (OD600˜0.6), at which point IPTG was added to a 1 mM final concentration. Growth was continued for an additional 2-4 hours, the cells were collected by centrifugation (15 min, 5000×g), resuspended in 100 mL 50 mM sodium phosphate, pH 8.0 containing 300 mM NaCl and 20 mM imidazole on ice. The cells were lysed via incubation with 1 mg/mL lysozyme (˜50,000 U/mg; Sigma, St. Louis, Mo., USA) for 30 min on ice followed by sonication (VirSonic 475; Virtis, Gardiner, N.Y.; 100 W, 4×30 s pulses, ˜1 min between pulses) on ice. Protein was purified with Ni-NTA agarose resin or spin columns (Qiagen, Hilden, Germany) using manufacturer's protocols. As RmlA is not stable in the elution buffer (50 mM sodium phosphate, pH 8.0 containing 300 mM NaCl and 250 mM imidazole), the buffer was exchanged with 20 mM Tris-HCl, pH 7.5 containing 1 mM EDTA, 200 mM NaCl and 10% (v/v) glycerol via PD-10 gel filtration columns (GE Healthcare, Uppsala, Sweden). Purified RmlA was subsequently concentrated to >10 mg/mL, flash frozen in liquid nitrogen, and stored at −80° C. Protein concentrations were determined by Bradford assay (Bio-Rad, Hercules, Calif., USA) using BSA as a standard, and a molecular mass of 34.6 kDa (Bradford, M. M. (1976) Anal. Biochem. 72, 248-254). Spectrophotometric determination of protein concentration [calc. ε280=33350 cm−1M−1 (Pace et al. (1995) Protein Sci. 4, 2411-2423)] were consistent with the Bradford assay.
RmlA mutagenesis—RmlA mutants were generated with the Quikchange mutagenesis kit (Stratagene, La Jolla, Calif., USA) using the wt RmlA-pET28a parent expression plasmid as the template and the primers indicated in Table 1. Individual progeny plasmids were confirmed by DNA sequencing to carry the desired mutations. Driven by these mutant plasmids, the corresponding RmlA variants were subsequently expressed and purified as described above.
TABLE 1
Primers used in site-directed mutagenesis
Sequence (5′ → 3′)
Q83E
for
CTTCAATATAAAGTAGAGCCAAGCCCGGATGG
(SEQ ID NO: 2)
rev
CCATCCGGGCTTGGCTCTACTTTATATTGAAG
(SEQ ID NO: 3)
Q83A
for
CTTCAATATAAAGTAGCCCCAAGCCCGGATGG
(SEQ ID NO: 4)
rev
CCATCCGGGCTTGGGGCTACTTTATATTGAAG
(SEQ ID NO: 5)
Q83S
for
CTTCAATATAAAGTATCCCCAAGCCCGGATGG
(SEQ ID NO: 6)
rev
CCATCCGGGCTTGGGGATACTTTATATTGAAG
(SEQ ID NO: 7)
Q83D
for
CTTCAATATAAAGTAGACCCAAGCCCGGATGG
(SEQ ID NO: 8)
rev
CCATCCGGGCTTGGGTCTACTTTATATTGAAG
(SEQ ID NO: 9)
Q83N
for
CTTCAATATAAAGTAAACCCAAGCCCGGATGG
(SEQ ID NO: 10)
rev
CCATCCGGGCTTGGGTTTACTTTATATTGAAG
(SEQ ID NO: 11)
Enzymatic Reactions—The enzyme assay was accomplished via slight modification of previously reported methods (Jiang et al. (2000) J. Am. Chem. Soc. 122, 6803-6804; Jiang et al. (2001) Angew. Chem., Int. Ed. 40, 1502-1505; Jiang et al. (2003) Chem Bio Chem 4, 443-446; Barton et al. (2002) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 99, 13397-13402). In a typical reaction, sugar-1-phosphate (10 mM final) and enzyme (0.01-50 μM) were mixed with NTP (0.01-40 mM) in the presence of MgCl2 ([NTP]+5 mM) and 10 U/mL inorganic pyrophosphatase (Sigma, St. Louis, Mo., USA) in 100 mM Tris HCl, pH 8.0 (20 μL final volume). Typical reactions were analyzed after 10 min at 37° C. and reaction times were extended for some slow reacting sugar/NTP combinations. Reactions were stopped by the addition of 80 μL prewarmed HPLC buffer and heat inactivation (95° C., 5 min). The amount of enzyme used and the incubation time was adjusted so that the reactions never proceeded to more than 10% turnover for kinetics, or 30% for activity assays. Equivalent reactions with heat denatured enzyme displayed no product formation as determined by HPLC.
Product Characterization—Reactions were analyzed via analytical HPLC (Supelcosil LC18-T; Supelco, Bellefonte, Pa.; 5 μm, 250×3 mm, 40 mM phosphoric acid, pH 6.5 with triethylamine, with a gradient of 0-10% MeOH over 20 min, 0.8 mL/min, A254). Due to earlier elution, a 5 min 0% MeOH isocratic hold was performed prior to starting the gradient for CTP-containing reactions. For nucleotide sugar products with commercially available standards, HPLC peak identity was confirmed by co-elution. The retention times for sugar-nucleotide product peaks under the above HPLC program are listed in Table 2.
TABLE 2
Retention times for Sugar Nucleotides (in minutes)a
CTPb
dCTP
UTP
GTP
dTTP
dGTP
ATP
dATP
6-amino-6-
3.1
4.6
4.1
6.7
10.6
11.8
11.9
17.0
deoxyglucose
Glucosamine
3.5
5.0
4.9
7.8
11.6
12.5
13.0
17.6
Mannose
5.2
7.1
7.2
10.2
14.0
15.2
15.7
20.2
Galactose
5.7
7.9
7.5
10.8
14.6
15.6
16.4
20.9
Glucose
6.2
8.4
8.2
11.2
16.0
15.8
16.4
20.8
N-acetyl-
7.1
9.0
9.0
12.2
14.0
16.6
17.6
21.1
glucosamine
3-O-methyl-
9.6
10.9
10.5
13.4
17.7
18.3
19.1
21.2
glucose
6-deoxyglucose
10.6
11.3
11.2
13.8
17.8
18.3
19.3
23.2
3-azido-3-
19.3
14.8
15.0
20.3
22.1
22.6
22.3
27.2
deoxyglucose
4-azido-4-
15.3
15.0
15.4
17.7
21.8
23.2
22.7
29.0
deoxyglucose
aSupelcosil LC18-T (Supelco, Bellefonte, PA, USA), 5 μM, 250 × 3 mm, 40 mM phosphoric acid, pH 6.5 with triethylamine, with a gradient of 0-10% MeOH over 20 min, 0.8 mL/min, A254.
bwith an additional 5 min isocratic hold at 0% MeOH prior to the start of the gradient.
Table 3 depicts the identities of representative new reaction products were confirmed by mass spectrometry.
TABLE 3
MS characterization for selected sugar
nucleotides
Expected
Observed
[M-H]−
[M-H]−
ADP-Glucose
588.1
588.1
CDP-Glucose
564.1
564.1
GDP-Glucose
604.1
604.1
UDP-Glucose
565.0
565.0
dADP-Glucose
572.1
572.1
dCDP-Glucose
548.1
548.1
dGDP-Glucose
588.1
588.1
dTDP-Glucose
563.1
563.1
ADP
587.1
587.2
Glucosamine
dADP-6-amino-
571.1
571.2
6-deoxyglucose
CDP-6-
548.1
548.1
deoxyglucose
dCDP-4-azido-4-
573.1
573.2
deoxyglucose
Kinetic Measurements—Pseudo first order kinetics were obtained by fixing glucose-1-phosphate at a saturating concentration of 10 mM (Barton et al. (2001) Nat Struct Biol 8, 545-551), and titrating NTPs. At least eight different concentrations in the range of ¼×KM to 4×KM (0.09-20 mM for dTTP, 0.2-40 mM for others) were assayed in triplicate. Reaction rates were confirmed to be linear over twice the incubation time. Activities were corrected for time and enzyme concentrations, and the kinetic curves were fit to the Michaelis-Menton equation using SigmaPlot with the Enzyme Kinetics module (SPSS, Chicago, Ill., USA).
Structural Models of Active-Site Mutants—Atomic coordinates of enzyme structures were obtained from the RSCB protein databank [RmlA with dTTP: 1IIM and RmlA with UDP-Glc: 1IIN (Barton et al. (2001) Nat Struct Biol 8, 545-551); MobA with GTP: 1FRW (Lake et al. (2000) J. Biol. Chem. 275, 40211-40217)]. Point mutations were simulated by the mutation function of Swiss-PdbViewer (Guex et al. (1997) Electrophoresis 18, 2714-2723). Models of non-crystallographic ligands were created by manual overlay of nucleotide bases so that they were in the same plane as that of the crystallographic base. Mutant side chain positions were selected from the rotamer set provided, and no additional energy minimization was performed on the structures. Figures were generated with VMD (Humphrey et al. (1996) J. Mol. Graph. 14, 33-38, 27-38) and rendered with POV-Ray ((2004) Persistence of Vision Raytracer (Version 3.6), Persistence of Vision Pty. Ltd., http://www.povray.org/).
The wild-type and mutant enzymes were expressed in soluble form at high levels (10-100 mg per liter of culture), and were purified to greater than 95% purity, as estimated by Coomassie stained SDS-PAGE, shown in
Previous RmlA studies indicated a preference for the pyrimidine nucleoside triphosphates dTTP and, to a lesser extent, UTP using standard assay conditions (Barton et al. (2001) Nat Struct Biol 8, 545-551; Jiang et al. (2000) J. Am. Chem. Soc. 122, 6803-6804; Jiang et al. (2001) Angew. Chem., Int. Ed. 40, 1502-1505; Jiang et al. (2003) Chem Bio Chem 4, 443-446; Barton et al. (2002) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 99, 13397-13402; Lindquist et al. (1993) Eur. J. Biochem. 211, 763-770). Recent work on thermophilic uridylyl- and thymidylyltransferases (Thermus caldophilus UDP-sugar pyrophosphorylase, or Usp, and Sulfolobus tokodaii ST0452, respectively) revealed the conversion of alternative nucleotides, including both ribo- and deoxyribo-variants of one or more purine nucleotides (Bae et al. (2005) Chem Bio Chem 6, 1963-1966; Zhang et al. (2005) J. Biol. Chem. 280, 9698-9705). Specifically, Usp was found to turn over glucose-1-phosphate with UTP, ATP, GTP, CTP, and dTTP. Alternatively, while ST0452 could not utilize ATP, CTP, or GTP, the enzyme showed good activity with UTP and the four deoxynucleoside triphosphates dATP, dTTP, dGTP ad dCTP. Given the high degree of amino acid similarity between Usp or ST0452 to RmlA (44% and 36%, respectively), these pioneering studies prompted a reevaluation of the RmlA purine nucleotide specificity.
Pseudo first-order Michaelis-Menton kinetic analysis revealed RmlA to turn over all eight ‘natural’ NTPs in the presence of glucose-1-phosphate (Table 4, below), albeit with appreciably reduced activity (˜15-560-fold reduction in the apparent kcat) in comparison to dTTP. The apparent KM for variant NTPs, including UTP, was also notably higher (˜13-50-fold) than that for dTTP. This cumulative analysis translates to a drastic reduction in the apparent RmlA specificity constants (kcat/KM) for variant NTPs ranging from ˜12-fold (UTP) to >15,000-fold (ATP) and is noteworthy for a number of reasons.
TABLE 4
Pseudo first order kinetic constants for RmlAa
kcatapp
KMapp
kcat/KMapp
(min−1)
(mM)
(min−1 · mM)
Wild-type
dTTP
1850 ± 40
0.29 ± 0.04
6300 ± 700
UTP
2460 ± 130
4.6 ± 0.7
530 ± 60
dATP
113 ± 5
7.8 ± 0.9
14.5 ± 1.1
dCTP
73 ± 3
10.5 ± 1.1
7.0 ± 0.4
dGTP
127 ± 5
3.7 ± 0.5
34 ± 4
ATP
3.32 ± 0.09
9.0 ± 0.6
0.39 ± 0.02
CTP
5.9 ± 0.2
13.7 ± 1.1
0.43 ± 0.02
GTP
8.4 ± 0.2
8.5 ± 0.6
0.99 ± 0.04
Q83D
dTTP
217 ± 14
6.2 ± 1.2
35 ± 5
dGTP
300 ± 20
11.5 ± 1.8
26 ± 2
GTP
12.8 ± 0.9
1.3 ± 0.4
10 ± 3
Q83S
dTTP
380 ± 30
2.4 ± 0.6
160 ± 30
dATP
320 ± 20
1.1 ± 0.3
280 ± 50
ATP
28.8 ± 1.4
3.4 ± 0.6
8.3 ± 1.1
awith 10 mM glucose-1-phosphate, 0.05-25 μM enzyme, [NTP] + 5 mM MgCl2, 10 U/mL inorganic pyrophosphatase, in 100 mM Tris-HCl pH 8.0 at 37° C.
First, although RmlA has been used for the efficient synthesis of a variety of ‘unnatural’ UDP-sugars, the inventor identified the dTTP bias of RmlA to be dictated by KM. Second, the present data highlights the apparent KMs of all alternative ‘natural’ NTPs to increase ˜10-fold while the large differences in the apparent kcats bias RmlA toward dTTP and UTP. Third, a comparison between the determined kinetic parameters for deoxyribose-containing nucleotides (dTTP, dATP, dCTP and dGTP) and ribose-containing nucleotides (UTP, ATP, CTP and GTP, respectively) suggests the ribose 2′-hydroxyl to contribute ˜10-fold to the overall RmlA apparent nucleotide specificity (kcat/KM). This is consistent with previously reported influences of 2′hydroxylation upon nucleotidyltransferase activity (Preiss et al. (1964) J. Biol. Chem. 239, 3119-3126; Kimata et al. (1966) J. Biol. Chem. 241, 1099-1113; Smoot et al. (1985) Eur. J. Biochem. 148, 83-87). Finally, it should be noted that due to the high apparent KMs for alternative nucleotides, preliminary assays were unsuccessful until the level of Mg2+ was adjusted as per Morrison (Morrison, J. F. (1979) Methods Enzymol. 63, 257-294), lending support to the theory that the true nucleotidyltransferase substrate is a Mg2+-NTP complex (Amann et al. (2001) Carbohydr. Res. 335, 23-32).
In light of the newly discovered ability of RmlA to employ variant NTPs, the specific activity of RmlA in the presence of a variety of ‘unnatural’ sugar phosphate/NTP combinations was assessed. Turnover was observed with nearly all sugar phosphate/NTP combinations examined, albeit with reductions in overall efficiencies up to 107-fold (
Examination of RmlA structural homologs emphasized that guanylyltransferases such as E. coli MobA—which catalyzes the phosphate-phosphate coupling reaction highlighted in
The activities of this mutant series, in the presence of alternative NTPs, was compared (Table 5, below) and the salient kinetic parameters for uniquely active mutants were subsequently determined (Table 4, see above).
TABLE 5
Relative activities of RmlA mutantsa,b
Q83E
Q83A
Q83S
Q83D
Q83N
ATP
0.7
7.9
14.0
0.6
6.5
CTP
0.8
1.3
1.5
0.2
0.7
GTP
2.8
0.7
2.2
3.7
0.2
dATP
0.4
4.6
7.9
0.8
3.8
dCTP
1.1
0.8
1.4
1.2
n.d.c
dGTP
1.7
0.2
0.6
1.6
0.1
UTP
1.3
0.2
0.2
0.2
0.2
dTTP
1.0
0.2
0.3
0.2
0.3
aas compared to wt RmlA.
bwith 10 mM Glucose-1-phosphate, 0.1-10 μM enzyme, 5 mM NTP, 10 mM MgCl2, 10 U/mL inorganic pyrophosphatase, in 100 mM Tris-HCl pH 8.0 at 37° C.
cn.d.—not determined.
Consistent with the inventor's approach, changing glutamine to aspartic acid (Q83D) increased the guanine/thymidine bias (as measured by the ratio of specificity constants) by ˜3 orders of magnitude, wherein this altered specificity derives in large part from a 6.5-fold improvement in apparent KM for GTP and a corresponding 21-fold increase in the dTTP KM (Table 4). In a similar manner, substituting glutamine for a smaller amino acid (Q83S) favored the adenine/thymidine bias by ˜3 orders of magnitude, wherein dATP improvements were predominately apparent KM-derived while ATP improvements were primarily apparent kcat-dictated (Table 4). In this latter case, the effect of mutations on apparent kcat was not entirely expected, as reduction in steric overlap and the alteration of hydrogen bonds were anticipated to mainly influence substrate and product binding. No significant increase in (d)CTP turnover was observed in any of the mutants tested (Table 5).
While this invention has been described in conjunction with the various exemplary embodiments outlined above, various alternatives, modifications, variations, improvements and/or substantial equivalents, whether known or that are or may be presently unforeseen, may become apparent to those having at least ordinary skill in the art. Accordingly, the exemplary embodiments according to this invention, as set forth above, are intended to be illustrative, not limiting. Various changes may be made without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention. Therefore, the invention is intended to embrace all known or later-developed alternatives, modifications, variations, improvements, and/or substantial equivalents of these exemplary embodiments. All publications, patents and patent applications cited herein are hereby incorporated by reference in their entirety for all purposes.
Patent | Priority | Assignee | Title |
Patent | Priority | Assignee | Title |
4683195, | Oct 25 1985 | Roche Molecular Systems, Inc | Process for amplifying, detecting, and/or-cloning nucleic acid sequences |
7122359, | Dec 13 2000 | Sloan-Kettering Institute for Cancer Research | Active-site engineering of nucleotidylyltransferases and general enzymatic methods for the synthesis of natural and “unnatural” UDP- and TDP-nucleotide sugars |
20030055235, | |||
WO248331, | |||
WO2005056786, |
Executed on | Assignor | Assignee | Conveyance | Frame | Reel | Doc |
Apr 16 2008 | Wisconsin Alumni Research Foundation | (assignment on the face of the patent) | / | |||
Apr 19 2008 | Wisconsin Alumni Research Foundation | NATIONAL INSTITUTES OF HEALTH NIH , U S DEPT OF HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES DHHS , U S GOVERNMENT | CONFIRMATORY LICENSE SEE DOCUMENT FOR DETAILS | 020899 | /0557 | |
Jun 06 2008 | THORSON, JON S | Wisconsin Alumni Research Foundation | ASSIGNMENT OF ASSIGNORS INTEREST SEE DOCUMENT FOR DETAILS | 021265 | /0815 |
Date | Maintenance Fee Events |
Jul 10 2015 | M2551: Payment of Maintenance Fee, 4th Yr, Small Entity. |
Jun 19 2019 | M2552: Payment of Maintenance Fee, 8th Yr, Small Entity. |
Sep 04 2023 | REM: Maintenance Fee Reminder Mailed. |
Feb 19 2024 | EXP: Patent Expired for Failure to Pay Maintenance Fees. |
Date | Maintenance Schedule |
Jan 17 2015 | 4 years fee payment window open |
Jul 17 2015 | 6 months grace period start (w surcharge) |
Jan 17 2016 | patent expiry (for year 4) |
Jan 17 2018 | 2 years to revive unintentionally abandoned end. (for year 4) |
Jan 17 2019 | 8 years fee payment window open |
Jul 17 2019 | 6 months grace period start (w surcharge) |
Jan 17 2020 | patent expiry (for year 8) |
Jan 17 2022 | 2 years to revive unintentionally abandoned end. (for year 8) |
Jan 17 2023 | 12 years fee payment window open |
Jul 17 2023 | 6 months grace period start (w surcharge) |
Jan 17 2024 | patent expiry (for year 12) |
Jan 17 2026 | 2 years to revive unintentionally abandoned end. (for year 12) |